Place

Infrastructure can improve the economic prospects of local areas and help to enhance the distinct identities of the places where we live, work, and enjoy life.

Updated:

Summary

The Commission adopts a place based approach to its thinking, reflecting the results of social research which showed 8 in 10 people believe good infrastructure is necessary to support a good quality of life.

The Commission adopts a place-based approach to its thinking, reflecting the results of social research which showed 8 in 10 people believe good infrastructure is necessary to support a good quality of life.
Infrastructure helps form the identity of places as well as creating efficient links between them. Better transport infrastructure can alleviate bottlenecks to growth in congested areas and improve connectivity, while infrastructure improvements also have the potential, alongside other policies such as skills training, to increase growth in lower productivity areas and help efforts to level up the economy.
Our towns study, for example, found that transport and digital infrastructure in particularly have an important role in supporting economic growth & better quality of life in towns and cities; while our 2022 Getting cities moving report identified the need to get more people making more trips into and around city centres to boost growth in English cities outside of London, without adding to congestion or undermining existing net zero objectives.
These reports informed many of the recommendations in the Second National Infrastructure Assessment on supporting growth in all regions of the country. These include:

  • cities adopting flexible strategic transport plans that can adapt to a range of future transport demand scenarios – backed up by £22 billion in long term funding for major transport projects between 2028 and 2045 – to get more people making more trips into and around city centres
  • to support this, government should make this long term funding for major projects conditional on the introduction of demand management schemes, to be designed to work best in a city’s local context
  • devolving power to local authorities responsible for strategic transport, to allow them to plan for the long term
  • ensuring gigabit capable connectivity is available nationwide by 2030, along with accelerating the deployment of 5G technology.

While the Commission’s remit does not include housing provision, we have advised government on how utility services can better support proposed housing developments and help enable the scale of house building needed to accommodate a growing population.

Data on place

A range of data sets relating to the theme of place is available to review on our Data pages. This includes data sets used in Commission reports, as well as historic data sets. Each can be reviewed online or downloaded. 

Review data

Latest Updates

Rail Needs Assessment for the Midlands and the North: interim report
York, UK - August 05, 2013: York railway station where the platforms curve under the famous glass and iron curved arched roof. Train awaits departure to London. Some passengers are waiting train for departure.

Rail Needs Assessment for the Midlands and the North: interim report

15 Jul 2020
Rail Needs Assessment: call for evidence
Cover of the Rail Needs Assessment Call for Evidence report

Rail Needs Assessment: call for evidence

25 Mar 2020
Infrastructure and the efficient delivery of new housing
Modern British housing

Infrastructure and the efficient delivery of new housing

This blog post relates to the new paper Infrastructure to support housing. We often hear that Britain is in the midst of a housing crisis. The government aims to tackle it by building one million homes in England over the next five years, with the annual build rate rising towards its 300,000 homes target. This...

13 Mar 2020 By
Annual Monitoring Report 2020 annex
Computer servers

Annual Monitoring Report 2020 annex

26 Feb 2020
Annual Monitoring Report 2020
thumbnail of NIC 2020 AMR Final

Annual Monitoring Report 2020

26 Feb 2020
Sir John Armitt speech to Cities Summit
Portrait of Sir John Armitt

Sir John Armitt speech to Cities Summit

Commission Chair Sir John Armitt addressed Metro Mayors and other city leaders from around the country who came together at a Cities Summit today – as part of our cities programme – to make the case for greater autonomy over transport decisions and long-term funding for cities, as set out in the National Infrastructure Assessment....

11 Sep 2019 By
Mayors tell PM: ‘You know the power of devolution better than anyone, now let us control our own destiny’
View over Bristol City Centre

Mayors tell PM: ‘You know the power of devolution better than anyone, now let us control our own destiny’

Today five of England’s metro mayors and leaders from cities across the country have gathered in London to set aside their political differences and demand the Prime Minister puts more power into their hands. The cross-party group is calling for further control over local transport and additional funding to help them transform connectivity in England’s...

10 Sep 2019 By
Freight
Blurred close-up image of an HGV

Freight

17 Apr 2019
Property value uplift tool
Bird's eye view of Liverpool city centre

Property value uplift tool

17 Apr 2019
Managing Congestion evidence report
Articulated lorry overtaking another lorry on a motorway

Managing Congestion evidence report

17 Apr 2019
Managing Congestion intervention dashboards
Congestion on an arterial road in central Newcastle

Managing Congestion intervention dashboards

17 Apr 2019
Freight Study impact and costing note
Picture of stacked cargo containers

Freight Study impact and costing note

17 Apr 2019
Managing Congestion
A traffic jam in Manchester

Managing Congestion

17 Apr 2019
Valuing urban infrastructure
View over Manchester city from high up.

Valuing urban infrastructure

In 2016, the National Infrastructure Commission set researchers at the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) two difficult questions: what do people and businesses value when they purchase properties, and how does improving transport infrastructure affect property prices? The answers to these questions are nuanced and vary across the country. Through analysing a large dataset (residential...

29 Mar 2019 By
Armitt: Speech on Next Steps for Cities
Portrait of Sir John Armitt

Armitt: Speech on Next Steps for Cities

Below is the text of National Infrastructure Commission Chair Sir John Armitt’s speech to the Next Steps for Cities event held in Birmingham on 27 March Check against delivery Good morning, and welcome to the first event in our next steps for cities programme. It’s gratifying to see representatives from such a wide range of...

27 Mar 2019 By

Evidence_Icon_Turquoise Created with Sketch.

Explore data used in the Commission's research, and gain insights from across UK infrastructure

Join our team of professionals supporting the Commission to provide evidence based and forward thinking advice on infrastructure strategy.